Gaining on IMF!!
bishopjulia
Posts: 205 Member
doing IMF and was losing... now I’m gaining!! Why am I doing wrong? Still consumed around 1200 cal! Getting very frustrated. I’m eating One meal a day ... how the heck am I gaining! This is discouraging... it really is. When you actually put the effort in and expect to see results and instead your pushed back 3 steps 😤😭
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Replies
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How long have you been doing this? How much have you lost and gained, and how quickly?
Some flucuation up and down is normal, especially for premenopausal women, even with a longer-term downward trend.5 -
Weight loss isn't linear, so if you're talking short term gain then should read the following:
https://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
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When you say “around 1200 calories,” how are you measuring your calorie intake? Are you using a food scale to weigh ALL of your food, and how many calories do you actually eat?
Weight loss is 100% about consistently being in a calorie deficit. It doesn’t have anything to do with how often you eat. Eating one meal a day helps some people stay in a deficit, but it is not a guarantee that you will be in a deficit without tracking carefully.3 -
There are mistakes that people commonly make that cause them to not lose weight that we might be able to spot if you change your Diary Sharing settings to Public: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/account/diary_settings2
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Calories are calories, regardless of how many meals you have or when you eat, so the fact you're IMF/OMAD is irrelevant. If you have to "put in effort" to IMF/OMAD and it's not working for you it sounds like you need a different approach.
Other than that, see above posts.4 -
Eating one meal a day. And yes counting the calories. Yesterday all my food was 843 ... including my chicken breast, asparagus and rye slice of bread I had for supper. So yes it’s frustrating when stay under or at 1200 and get on that scale expecting a drop and see a gain.2 -
bishopjulia wrote: »
Eating one meal a day. And yes counting the calories. Yesterday all my food was 843 ... including my chicken breast, asparagus and rye slice of bread I had for supper. So yes it’s frustrating when stay under or at 1200 and get on that scale expecting a drop and see a gain.
Honestly, that graph looks 100% normal. The time horizon on the recent weights is too short to see what your results are. My weight loss graph looked pretty much like the example someone posted earlier in the thread, all jaggedy ups and downs, with an overall downward long-term slope.
Because of water weight fluctuations, and variations in weight of food in transit in our digestive system (on route to elimination), the scale won't drop every day, and sometimes rises.
Please don't undereat, chasing daily losses. That's a recipe for failure. Stick very close to your calorie goal, and trust the process. Check your average results over 4-6 weeks of doing that. Compare the same point in two different menstrual cycles.
Please try not to stress about it. It'll be fine. The time horizon is just too short to see it. Really! :flowerforyou:9 -
Are you weighing your food2
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I stick to ~1200 calories (plus eating back some exercise calories) and have been weighing daily since September. To reiterate the graph used above, here is my actual MFP chart of weight loss using 1200, and eating most/all of my calories between 12pm-8pm:
It's not a straight line down. You will go up some days/weeks. But you will consistently lose over time as long as you maintain a deficit.
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bishopjulia wrote: »
Eating one meal a day. And yes counting the calories. Yesterday all my food was 843 ... including my chicken breast, asparagus and rye slice of bread I had for supper. So yes it’s frustrating when stay under or at 1200 and get on that scale expecting a drop and see a gain.
Honestly, that graph looks 100% normal. The time horizon is too short to see what your results are. My weight loss graph looked pretty much like the example someone posted earlier in the thread, all jaggedy ups and downs, with an overall downward long-term slope.
Because of water weight fluctuations, and variations in weight of food in transit in our digestive system (on route to elimination), the scale won't drop every day, and sometimes rises.
Please don't undereat, chasing daily losses. That's a recipe for failure. Stick very close to your calorie goal, and trust the process. Check your average results over 4-6 weeks of doing that. Compare the same point in two different menstrual cycles.
Please try not to stress about it. It'll be fine. The time horizon is just too short to see it. Really! :flowerforyou:
That is 8 months ... weight loss started after my broken leg was healed. I was so close to the 20 lbs mark lol then my body is like “Nope! You going up” lol
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bishopjulia wrote: »bishopjulia wrote: »
Eating one meal a day. And yes counting the calories. Yesterday all my food was 843 ... including my chicken breast, asparagus and rye slice of bread I had for supper. So yes it’s frustrating when stay under or at 1200 and get on that scale expecting a drop and see a gain.
Honestly, that graph looks 100% normal. The time horizon is too short to see what your results are. My weight loss graph looked pretty much like the example someone posted earlier in the thread, all jaggedy ups and downs, with an overall downward long-term slope.
Because of water weight fluctuations, and variations in weight of food in transit in our digestive system (on route to elimination), the scale won't drop every day, and sometimes rises.
Please don't undereat, chasing daily losses. That's a recipe for failure. Stick very close to your calorie goal, and trust the process. Check your average results over 4-6 weeks of doing that. Compare the same point in two different menstrual cycles.
Please try not to stress about it. It'll be fine. The time horizon is just too short to see it. Really! :flowerforyou:
That is 8 months ... weight loss started after my broken leg was healed. I was so close to the 20 lbs mark lol then my body is like “Nope! You going up” lol
I get that the graph is longer term (and edited my PP to clarify).
Your recent weights are too short a time to see a trend.
Your long term graph, in the early part, looks like dieting hard for a month or two, then rebounding. The section from around mid-June for a couple of months looks more reasonable. I'm not sure exactly where the broken leg was in there, but that will likely have involved a biggish, fairly long water weight retention for healing, so I could be reading the graph wrong in that way.
1200 is low, too low for a lot of women (not all). It's hard to stick to, and a too-low goal saps energy level (reducing daily life calorie burn), and seems to make water weight fluctuations worse. Slow and steady may be frustrating, but it can be effective.
How much do you have to lose? How fast are you trying to lose it? Did MFP give you the 1200 goal?5
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